Abstract

Pronounced room temperature vertical shifts in the magnetic hysteresis loops of granular, highly polycrystalline and ferromagnetic-like BiFeO3 thin films are observed upon field-cooling from a temperature above the Néel temperature of bulk BiFeO3. This is ascribed to the interplay between the preferential alignment, established by the field-cooling process, of the net magnetic moment, which arises from uncompensated antiferromagnetic spins, and the pinning of a fraction of these spins at the particle boundaries. Conversely, field-cooling of an epitaxially grown BiFeO3 film results in no vertical shift, confirming the effective role played by the particle boundaries (i.e., morphology) of the granular-like BiFeO3 films in the process of spin frustration.

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